The
Operatic Grandeur Of "More Europe"
by Mark J. Grant
Europe is becoming
quite strange. The World is becoming quite strange. A politician gets
up and speaks and says nothing, no one listens to what he said, then he is
roundly congratulated for his bold words that were heard by no one and then
everyone disagrees with what they think he might have said. The
Continent seems to be in a dream-state where the worse it gets; the better it
is because the ECB will be drawn in and provide liquidity like the ever-after
will provide Redemption. I am not sure America is any better actually. In the
United States we admit we are printing money while in Europe they “print and
deny” but the outcome is about the same.
It is a weird
economic scene these days, a Dali landscape that is melting, when worse is
better and our leaders intone the old magic; “the higher, the fewer; the never,
the less.” I expect, any day, that the ECB will buy all of the sovereign debt of
Europe and declare each nation “debt free and without risk.” It will be a
gigantic do-over where the ECB is to be re-capitalized by odd aliens that we
have not yet met. Greece falls and falls again and the EU demands a plan, which
is given, and we herald their actions for yet one more plan that will never be
implemented and “God Save the Queen.” Portugal falls and Ireland falls and
Spain drafts a new plan, as directed, so that they can get more money and the
markets rejoice because it is one more scheme that has all of the chance of
implementation of the Tudors taking the Spanish throne.